44.1
At the beginning of the following spring, the consul Q. Marcius Philippus
arrived in Brundisium with the 5000 men who were to reinforce his legions.
M. Popilius, an ex-consul, and a number of young men of equally noble birth,
followed the consul as military tribunes for the legions in Macedonia.
C. Marcius Figulus, who was to command the fleet, reached Brundisium at
the same time, and he and the consul left Italy together. The following
day they made Corcyra, the next day Actium, the seaport of Acarnania. The
consul landed at Ambracia and proceeded by land to Thessaly. Figulus sailed
past Leucatas and entered the Gulf of Corinth. Leaving his ship at Creusa
he hurried on through the middle of Boeotia-a one day's march for a lightly-equipped
soldier-to join the fleet at Chalcis. A. Hostilius was at the time in a
camp near Palaepharsalus in Thessaly. He had not fought any important action
but he had checked the licence and disorder of his soldiers and brought
them up to a state of complete military efficiency, and he had been consistently
honourable in his conduct towards the allies and protected them from all
injustice and oppression. On hearing of the arrival of his successor he
made a careful inspection of the arms, the men and the horses, and went
to meet the consul with his army in complete equipment. Their first meeting
was quite in accord with their rank and their character as Romans, and
subsequently they worked in perfect harmony as long as the proconsul stayed
with the army.
A few days later the consul addressed his troops. He first alluded to
Perseus's contemplated assassination of his father, and his actual murder
of his brother, and then went on to describe how, after his crimes had
secured him the crown, he had recourse to poisoning and bloodshed; how
he laid an infamous plot against Eumenes, inflicted injuries against the
people of Rome, and plundered the cities of the allies of Rome in violation
of the existing treaty. He would find out in the ruin of his fortunes how
hateful all this conduct was to the gods, for the gods bestowed their favour
on natural affection and honourable dealing; it was by these that the Roman
people gained their lofty position in the world. He next drew a comparison
between the strength of Rome, embracing as she does the world, and the
strength of Macedonia, army against army. "How much greater," he exclaimed,
"were the forces of Philip and Antiochus, and yet they were shattered by
armies no stronger than ours today."
44.2
After kindling the spirits of his men by speeches of this kind, he consulted
his staff on the strategy of the war. C. Marius, the praetor, who had taken
over the command of the fleet, was also present. They decided not to waste
any more time in Thessaly, but to go forward at once into Macedonia, and
the praetor was to make a naval attack on the enemy's coast at the same
time. The consul issued orders for the soldiers to take a month's supply
of corn. Ten days after taking over the command of the army he broke up
the camp, and at the end of the first day's march he called the guides
together and told them to explain to the council what route each of them
would choose. After they had withdrawn he asked the council to say which
they thought best. Some preferred the route through the Pythian Pass; others
were in favour of the road over the Cambunian Range which the consul Hostilius
had taken the previous year; others again chose the road by Lake Ascuris.
All these routes had a considerable section in common; the further discussion
was therefore adjourned until they reached the point where they began to
diverge. From there he marched into Perrhaebia and went into camp between
Azorus and Doliche, to hold a second consultation as to the best route
to take. During this time Perseus had heard that the enemy were approaching,
but did not know which route they were taking. He decided to occupy all
the passes, and sent 10,000 light infantry under Asclepiodotus to hold
a peak in the Cambunian Range-its local name is Volustana. At a fortified
place above Lake Ascuris, called Lapathus, Hippias with 12,000 Macedonians
was posted to defend the pass. Perseus himself with the rest of his force
formed an entrenched camp at Dium. And here it would almost seem as if
his reasoning faculties were benumbed and he was destitute of all resource,
for he used to start from his camp at Dium with an escort of light cavalry,
and gallop to Heraclea or to Phila, returning at the same speed to Dium.
44.3
In the meanwhile the consul had made up his mind to march through the pass
near Ottolobus, where as already stated the king's forces were; 4000 men
were nevertheless sent on in advance to occupy suitable positions. They
were under the command of M. Claudius and Q. Marcius, the consul's son.
The whole of the force followed very soon afterwards. The road, however,
was so steep and rough and stony that the light troops in advance had,
with great difficulty, covered only fifteen miles when they formed their
camp and rested at a place called Dierum. On the following day they advanced
seven miles and after seizing some rising ground not far from the enemy's
camp, they sent word to the consul that they had reached the enemy, and
had established themselves in a safe and extremely advantageous position,
so that he might follow at such speed as he could. The messenger found
the consul at Lake Ascuris in a state of anxiety about the difficulties
of the route upon which he had entered and also about the fate of those
few troops whom he had sent in advance to the positions occupied by the
enemy. He was greatly relieved at hearing the message sent him, and marching
on with his main body reunited the whole of his force and encamped in an
admirable position on the slopes of the hill already occupied. Its height
was such that it commanded a view not only of the enemy's camp, which was
not more than a mile distant, but of the whole of the country up to Dium
and Phila and the far-extended line of the sea coast. The soldiers' spirits
rose when they saw the whole weight of the war, the entire military strength
of the king and the hostile country so near them. They pressed the consul
to lead them at once against the enemy, but he allowed them one day's rest
after the toils of the march. The next day, leaving a detachment to guard
the camp, he led them out to battle.
44.4
Hippias had recently been sent by the king to guard the pass, and as soon
as he caught sight of the Roman camp on the hill he prepared his men for
battle and marched to meet the enemy's column as it advanced. The Romans
went into the fight in light equipment; the enemy force, too, consisted
of light infantry; these troops are the readiest to commence an action.
When the two bodies met they at once discharged their missiles; many wounds
were inflicted in their random charges, a few were killed. The following
day they engaged in a more exasperated temper and in great strength, and
had there been more space in which to deploy their lines a decisive action
might have been fought. The summit of the mountain narrows into a wedge-shaped
ridge which hardly allows a front to be formed of three men abreast. So
while the actual fighting was carried on by a few, the rest, especially
the heavy infantry, stood and watched it. The light infantry were able
to run forward through the dips in the ridge and attack the flanks of the
enemy's light infantry, both where the ground was favourable and where
it was not. Night put an end to the battle in which more had been wounded
than killed.
The next day the Roman commander was at a loss what to do. To stay on
the bare mountain height was impossible; it was equally impossible for
him to retreat without loss of honour and even without danger should the
enemy attack him from the higher ground. There was only one course left,
to carry through the adventure with the same rashness with which he had
entered upon it; a policy which the result sometimes proves to be a wise
one. Matters had come to this-if the consul had had an enemy like the old
kings of Macedonia he might have incurred a crushing defeat. Whilst, however,
Perseus was riding with his cavalry along the coast at Dium and heard twelve
miles away the noise and clamour of the fighting, he did not strengthen
his line by sending fresh men to replace those who had borne the burden
of the combat, nor, what was most important of all, did he himself appear
on the field. And yet the Roman commander, more than sixty years old and
very stout, was discharging personally all the duties of a soldier with
unflagging energy. To the very last he showed the same splendid audacity
as he had at the beginning. Leaving Popilius to hold the summit he made
preparations to cross the ridge and sent men to clear a way where before
there was not even a track. Attalus and Misagenes with their two contingents
were told off to protect the pioneers. The cavalry and baggage formed the
front part of the column, the consul with his legions followed.
44.5
It is impossible to describe the toil and difficulty they experienced in
descending the mountain, with the baggage and animals and their packs perpetually
falling. They had hardly gone four miles when the one thing they desired
above all else was to return if possible to their starting point. The elephants
caused almost as much confusion in the line as the enemy might have done;
when they came to places which could not be crossed they flung their drivers
off and created great alarm, especially among the horses, by their appalling
roar, until a plan was devised for getting them across. The steepness of
the slope was measured and two long stout poles were firmly fastened in
the ground at the bottom of it somewhat wider apart than the breadth of
the animal. On the top of the poles a cross-beam was fastened and with
their ends resting on this beam, balks 30 feet long were fastened together
so as to form a bridge, and then covered with earth. A short distance away
another similar bridge was constructed, and then a third, and so on wherever
the descent was precipitous. The elephant went from the solid ground on
to the bridge, and just before he reached the lower end of it the poles
were cut away and the bridge subsided down to the beginning of the next
bridge below it. The elephants were thus compelled to slide quietly down,
some on their feet, some on their haunches. When the level of the next
bridge was reached. the lower end was made to fall in the same way and
the elephants were carried down until they reached more level ground.
The Romans advanced little more than seven miles that day. Very little
of this was done on their feet; their mode of progression was for the most
part to roll down with their arms and the other things they had to carry
in a most uncomfortable and painful manner; so much so indeed that even
their general himself who was responsible for the expedition admitted that
the entire army could have been annihilated by a small body of assailants.
At nightfall they came to a small plain shut in on all sides. They had
at last reached a place which afforded them a sure foothold, but they had
not much time for looking round and seeing how exposed the position was.
The next day they had to wait in this valley for Popilius and the detachment
left with him, and these men, though the enemy nowhere threatened them,
found a most troublesome enemy in the difficulties of the descent. The
army, once more united, marched the next day through the pass called by
the natives Callipeuce. From there the march was as rough and difficult
as before, but they had learnt by experience and were in a more hopeful
mood because the enemy nowhere showed himself, and they were approaching
the sea. When they had descended into the level country between Heracleum
and Libethrum, they formed their camp. The greater part of the infantry
were on rising ground; that part of the plain where the cavalry had their
tents was enclosed with the rest by the rampart.
44.6
The king was having his bath when news was brought of the approach of the
enemy. On hearing it he sprang in a panic from his seat and rushed out,
exclaiming that he was conquered without a battle. Amidst distracted plans
and contradictory orders he sent two of his ''friends", the one to Pella
to throw into the sea the treasures that were stored at Phacus, the other
to burn the fleet. He recalled Asclepiodotus and Hippias and their troops
from the places they were occupying, and left all the approaches to Macedonia
open to the enemy. All the gilded statues were carried off from Dium to
prevent their falling into the hands of the enemy, and the inhabitants
were forced to remove to Pydna. Thus what might have been thought recklessness
on the part of the consul in advancing to a place from which he could not
retreat, had the enemy chosen to stop him, was actually made to look like
a carefully-planned-out act of daring. The Romans had two passes through
which they might emerge from their present position: one through Tempe
into Thessaly, the other past Dium and into Macedonia; and both were held
by the king's troops. If, therefore, there had been an intrepid general
who could have held out for ten days against what at first sight looked
like a steadily advancing danger, there would have been no retreat open
to the Romans through Tempe into Thessaly, nor any possibility of carrying
supplies through; for the pass of Tempe is a difficult one to traverse,
even if it is not occupied by an enemy. In addition to the narrowness of
the road which for five miles affords scanty footing for a loaded animal,
there are on both sides sheer cliffs, so precipitous that you cannot look
down without feeling dizzy. The noise and depth of the Peneus flowing through
the middle of the ravine adds to the stern and forbidding effect. This
district, so strong by nature, was held by detachments of the king's troops
at four different places. One was posted at the mouth of the pass at Gonnus;
a second in Condylus, an impregnable stronghold; a third at Lapathus, which
they call Charax; a fourth on the road itself in the middle of the narrowest
part of the valley. where ten men could easily make a successful defence.
The conveyance of supplies and their own return through Tempe were thus
alike cut off, and they would have had to make their way back to the mountains
over which they had come. They had escaped the observation of the enemy
before; they could not do so now with his troops posted on the commanding
heights, and the difficulties they had experienced destroyed all hopes.
There was no course left in this rash adventure but to go through the midst
of the enemy and enter Macedonia by way of Dium, and this, if the gods
had not deprived the king of his reason, would have been a task of enormous
difficulty. The spurs of Mount Olympus leave only a width of a mile between
the mountain and the sea. Half this space is filled by the broad marshes
at the mouth of the Baphyrus, the rest of the ground is taken up either
by the temple of Jupiter or the town itself. The little bit that is left
could be blocked by a small fosse and rampart, and there was such a quantity
of stones and growing timber at hand that a wall might have been thrown
up and turrets raised. Blinded by the suddenness of the danger, the king
took none of these things into consideration; he withdrew his garrisons,
leaving every place open and defenceless, and fled to Pydna.
44.7
The consul saw in the foolish and cowardly conduct of his enemy the strongest
assurance of safety for himself and his army, and the bright prospect of
final victory. Orders were despatched to Sp. Lucretius at Larisa to seize
the strongholds round Tempe which the enemy had abandoned and Popilius
was sent forward to reconnoitre the passes round Dium. When he found that
the country was clear in every direction he made an advance, and after
marching for two days arrived at Dium. He ordered the site for the camp
to be marked out just under the temple in order that the sanctity of the
place might in no way be violated. On entering the place he found that
though it was not large, it was, nevertheless, so adorned by public buildings
and a whole multitude of statues, and so strongly fortified, that it was
difficult to believe there was not some sinister motive behind the purposeless
abandonment of so much wealth and splendour. After spending a day in thoroughly
exploring the neighbourhood, he resumed his advance, and in the belief
that there would be an abundant supply of corn in Pieria, he marched as
far as the River Mitys, and the next day to Agassae. The population surrendered
this city to him, and with the view of making a favourable impression on
the rest of the Macedonians, he contented himself with demanding hostages,
and left the city without stationing a garrison and promised that the citizens
should be exempt from tribute and live under their own laws. Another day's
march brought him to the River Ascordus, where he encamped. As he found
that the further he advanced from Thessaly the greater was the difficulty
of obtaining any supplies whatever, he returned to Dium, and there was
no doubt in any one's mind as to what they would have had to endure had
they been cut off altogether from Thessaly, seeing that it was not safe
to march any distance from it. Perseus assembled all his troops together
with their generals and severely censured the commandants of the garrisons-Asclepiodotus
and Hippias most of all. He declared that they had handed over the keys
of Macedonia to the Romans, but no one could more justly be charged with
this than he himself. When the consul descried the fleet out at sea, he
quite hoped that the ships were bringing supplies, for provisions were
extremely dear and the supply almost exhausted. But from those who had
already entered the harbour he learnt that the cargo ships had been left
behind at Magnesia. Whilst he was quite undecided what to do-for he had
to contend with the difficulties of the situation quite apart from anything
the enemy might do to aggravate them-a despatch was handed to him from
Sp. Lucretius stating that he had discovered that the strongholds commanding
the Vale of Tempe, and those in the neighbourhood of Phila, all held abundance
of corn and of other necessary supplies.
44.8
The consul was highly delighted at receiving this information and marched
from Dium to Phila that he might strengthen the garrison there, and at
the same time distribute the corn to his men, as the supplies were being
so slowly brought up. This movement provoked comments that were anything
but favourable. Some said he retreated through fear of the enemy, because
had he remained in Pieria he would have had to give battle. Others held
that unaware of the perpetual changes of fortune, he had thrown away the
opportunities which presented themselves, and let slip through his fingers
what it would very soon be impossible to recover. For the evacuation of
Dium woke up his enemy, who then for the first time realised the necessity
of recovering what had been previously lost through his own fault. When
he heard of the consul's withdrawal he returned to Dium, repaired what
had been shattered and devastated by the Romans, replaced the battlements
which had been shaken down, strengthened the walls in all directions, and
finally fixed his camp on the other bank of the Elpeus. This river is an
extremely dangerous one to cross, and it served to protect his camp. It
rises on Mount Olympus; in summer it is a narrow brook, but when swollen
by winter storms it rushes over the boulders in enormous eddies and washing
out the earth at the bottom and carrying it down to the sea, it forms whirlpools
of great depth, and the continual hollowing out of the channel leaves the
banks precipitous on both sides. As Perseus believed that the advance of
the enemy would be arrested by this river, it was his intention to spend
the rest of the summer there. The consul meanwhile sent Popilius with 2000
men from Phila to Heracleum. This place is about five miles distant from
Phila, midway between Dium and Tempe, and is situated on a cliff which
overhangs the river.
44.9
Before Popilius commenced the assault he tried to induce the magistrates
and chief men to test the good faith and clemency of the Romans rather
than their strength. His appeal made no impression on them, for they saw
the fires in the distance of the king's camp by the Elpeus. Then the attack
began in earnest, by land and also by sea-for the fleet was moored off
the shore-by direct assault as well as by the employment of siege engines
and artillery. Some young Romans turned their training in the Circus games
to purposes of war and in this way seized the lowest portion of the wall.
Before the extravagant habit came in of filling the Circus with animals
from all parts of the world, it was the practice to devise various forms
of amusement, as the chariot and horse races were over within the hour.
Amongst other exhibitions, bodies of youths, numbering generally about
sixty, but larger in the more elaborate games, were introduced fully armed.
To some extent they represented the maneuvers of an army, but their movements
were more skilful and resembled more nearly the combat of gladiators. After
going through various evolutions, they formed a solid square with their
shields held over their heads, touching one another; those in the front
rank standing erect; those in the second slightly stooping; those in the
third and fourth bending lower and lower; whilst those in the rear rank
rested on their knees. In this way they formed a testudo, which sloped
like the roof of a house. From a distance of fifty feet two fully armed
men ran forward and, pretending to threaten one another, went from the
lowest to the highest part of the testudo over the closely locked shields;
at one moment assuming an attitude of defiance on the very edge, and then
rushing at one another in the middle of it just as though they were jumping
about on solid ground.
A testudo formed in this way was brought up against the lowest part
of the wall. When the soldiers who were mounted on it came close up to
the wall they were at the same height as the defenders, and when these
were driven off, the soldiers of two companies climbed over into the city.
The only difference was that the front rank and the files did not raise
their shields above their heads for fear of exposing themselves; they held
them in front as in battle. Thus they were not hit by the missiles from
the walls, and those which were hurled on the testudo rolled off harmlessly
to the ground like a shower of rain from the roof of a house. Now that
Heracleum was taken, the consul encamped there, apparently with the intention
of marching to Dium and, after driving the king from there, on to Pieria.
But he was already making his preparations for wintering, and ordered roads
to be constructed for the transport of supplies from Thessaly, suitable
places for storing corn to be selected and houses to be built where those
who brought up the supplies could be lodged.
44.10
When Perseus had recovered from his panic, he began to wish that his commands
had not been obeyed, when in his hurry he ordered his treasure at Pella
to be thrown into the sea and the naval arsenal at Thessalonica to be burnt.
Andronicus, who had been sent for that purpose to Thessalonica, had delayed
carrying out his orders and, as it happened, left the king time for repentance.
Nicias was not so cautious and had thrown that part of the money which
was lying at Phacus overboard, but the mistake proved to be not irremediable,
for almost the whole was fished up by divers. The king was so ashamed of
his fright that he ordered the divers to be secretly put to death, and
the same fate overtook Andronicus and Nicias, in order that no one alive
might know anything about his insane orders. C. Marcius sailed with his
fleet from Heracleum to Thessalonica and disembarking armed forces on many
points along the coast devastated the country far and wide. He engaged
successfully the troops who hurried out of the city and drove them back
in hasty flight to the shelter of their walls. He was now creating alarm
in the city itself, but the citizens placed artillery of all kinds on the
walls, and not only those who ventured near the walls but even the men
on board were hit by the stones which hurtled from their engines. The troops
were accordingly ordered again on board and the siege of Thessalonica was
abandoned. They sailed thence to Aelia, about fifteen miles distant, lying
opposite to Pydna, and possessing a fertile soil. After devastating this
district they coasted along as far as Antigonea. Here they went ashore
and carried off a considerable amount of plunder to the ships. While thus
engaged they were attacked by a composite force of Macedonian infantry
and cavalry, who put them to flight and pursued them down to the shore,
killing some 500 of them and taking quite as many prisoners. Finding themselves
prevented from gaining the safe shelter of their ships, the very necessity
of their situation rekindled the courage of the Romans, and under the incentives
of shame and despair they renewed the fight on the beach. The men in the
ships helped them and about 200 Macedonians were slain and an equal number
were taken prisoners.
44.11
The fleet sailed on to the territory of Pallene where they went ashore
to plunder. This district, by far the most fertile of all those on the
coast along which they had sailed, belonged to Cassandrea. Here Eumenes,
who had sailed from Elaea, met them with twenty decked ships, and five
had also been sent by Prusias. This accession of strength emboldened the
praetor to attempt the capture of Cassandrea. This city was built by Cassander
on the narrow isthmus which connects the district of Pallene with the rest
of Macedonia, and is washed on one side by the Toronaic Gulf and on the
other by the Gulf of Macedonia. The tongue of land on which it stands projects
into the sea, forming a promontory equal in extent to the towering Mount
Athos. In the direction of Magnesia it has two headlands; the larger one
is called the Posideum, the smaller the Cape of Canastra. The attack was
commenced on two sides. The Roman commander, at a place called Clitae,
carried his lines through from the Macedonian to the Toronaic Gulf and
hedged them with forked poles to cut off all communication with the north.
On the other side there was a canal, and here Eumenes was operating. The
Romans had a very heavy task in filling up a fosse which Perseus had recently
excavated for the defence of the town. The praetor, seeing no heaps lying
about anywhere, enquired where the earth out of the fosse had been carried.
Some arches were pointed out to him which had been built, not up to the
thickness of the old wall, but to that of a single brick. The consul formed
the design of breaking through these and penetrating into the city, and
he thought he might do this unobserved, if the scaling parties assaulted
the walls elsewhere and called off the defenders to these threatened points.
The garrison of Cassandrea consisted of a far from contemptible force of
able-bodied townsmen, and in addition 800 Agrianes and 2000 Illyrians sent
by Pleuratus from Peneste, all keen fighters. Whilst these were defending
the walls where the Romans were doing their utmost to surmount them, the
brickwork of the arches was broken down in a moment and the city laid open.
If those who had made the breaches had been armed, they would have taken
the place at once. When the soldiers heard that this had been effected,
they were so delighted that they raised a sudden cheer and prepared to
break into the city at various points.
44.12
For a moment the enemy wondered what this sudden cheer meant. Then, on
learning that the city lay open, the commandants of the garrison, Pytho
and Philip, thinking that this would be an advantage to whichever side
was the first to attack, made a sortie with a strong body of Agrianes and
Illyrians and charged the Romans who were coming up from all sides and
were massing with the intention of entering the city in regular formation.
Unable to present a firm front or proper line of battle, they were routed
and pursued as far as the fosse, into which they were driven headlong,
and lay in heaps. Nearly 600 were killed there, and almost all who were
caught between the wall and the fosse were wounded. His attempt thus recoiling
on himself made the praetor somewhat slow in forming other plans. Eumenes,
too, who was making a combined attack by land and sea, was equally unsuccessful.
It was decided therefore to post strong detachments on both sides of the
city to prevent any succour being introduced from Macedonia, and then,
as direct assault had failed, to commence a regular siege. Whilst they
were preparing for this, ten swift ships belonging to Perseus's fleet were
sent up from Thessalonica with a picked force of Gaulish mercenaries on
board. When they caught sight of the Roman fleet standing out to sea, they
waited till the depth of night, and then sailing in single line they made
for the nearest point on which to disembark, and so entered the city. The
news of this addition to the defence compelled Eumenes and the Romans to
raise the siege. Sailing round the promontory they brought up at Torone.
This place, too, they prepared to attack, but on finding that there was
a strong body of defenders they gave up the attempt and shaped their course
to Demetrias. On approaching the walls they saw that they were fully manned,
so they sailed on to Iolcus, intending after devastating the district to
attack Demetrias from that side.
44.13
In order that he might not remain perfectly inactive in the enemy's country,
the consul sent M. Popilius with 5000 men to attack Meliboea. This city
lies on the lower spurs of Ossa, looking towards Thrace and in a position
to command Demetrias. At first the appearance of the enemy dismayed the
inhabitants, but on recovering from their alarm, they flew to arms and
ran to the gates and walls, wherever they suspected that an entrance might
be forced, and in this way put an end to any hopes that the city might
be taken at the first assault. Preparations were accordingly made for a
regular siege and the construction of the necessary works was commenced.
Perseus heard that Meliboea was being attacked by the consul's army and
that the fleet was lying off Iolcus, preparatory to an attack on Demetrias.
He sent one of his generals, a man called Euphranor, with a picked force
of 2000 men to Meliboea. This officer was ordered, in case he cleared the
Romans away from Meliboea, to make a secret march to Demetrias and enter
the city before the Romans advanced against it from Iolcus. His sudden
appearance on the ground above the Roman lines created great alarm amongst
the besiegers of Meliboea; their works were abandoned and burnt. The siege
of the one city being raised, Euphranor hurried on to Demetrias. In the
night . . . not only the walls . . . but even their fields they felt sure
could be protected from ravages. They made sorties and attacked the scattered
groups of plunderers, not without wounding many of them. However, the praetor
and Eumenes rode round the walls, examining the situation of the city,
to see if they could not make an attempt somewhere, either by siege-works
or by storm. There was a rumour that negotiations for the establishment
of friendly relations between Perseus and Eumenes had been carried on by
Cydas of Crete and Antimachus, the governor of Demetrias. At all events,
the Romans withdrew from Demetrias. Eumenes sailed away to visit the consul,
and after congratulating him upon his successful invasion of Macedonia,
went home. The praetor sent part of his fleet to Sciathus to lie up for
the winter; with the rest of his ships he steered for Oreum in Euboea,
as he considered that city the most suitable base from which supplies could
be sent to the armies in Macedonia and Thessaly. Very different accounts
are given of Eumenes. If you are to believe Valerius Antias, the praetor
received no assistance from his fleet, though he had often written for
his co-operation, and further, when he left for Asia, he was not on good
terms with the consul, nor could the consul induce him to leave behind
the Gaulish cavalry whom he had brought with him. Valerius goes on to say
that Eumenes's brother Attalus remained with the consul, was unswervingly
loyal to him and rendered splendid service in the war.
44.14
Whilst the Macedonian war was going on, envoys from a Transalpine Gaulish
chieftain Balanos-his name is given but not that of his tribe-went to Rome
with promises of assistance in the war. Thanks were accorded to them by
the senate, and presents sent to their chief-a golden chain, two pounds
in weight, and four golden bowls, each weighing one pound, a horse with
all its trappings, and a complete set of equestrian armour. The Gauls were
followed by a deputation from Pamphylia, who brought into the senate-house
a golden crown made out of 20,000 "philippei," and begged that they might
be allowed to place it as an offering in the shrine of Jupiter Optimus
Maximus in the Capitol. Permission was granted, and the senate also acceded
to their request for a renewal of the league of friendship with Rome; they
each received a present of 2000 ases. An audience was then granted to envoys
from Prusias, and shortly afterwards to those from Rhodes. Both embassies
dealt with the same subject, but on very different lines; they both pleaded
for peace with Perseus. The tone of Prusias's representatives was one of
entreaty rather than demand. Prusias declared that he had stood by the
Romans up to that time, and would continue to do so as long as the war
lasted, but when envoys from Perseus approached him with the object of
bringing the war with Rome to an end he had promised to intercede for him
with the senate. He begged them, if they could make up their minds to lay
aside their resentment, to look favourably upon him as the instrument of
procuring peace. Such was the appeal which the king's envoys made.
The Rhodians were far less deprecatory. They enumerated the services
they had rendered to the people of Rome, and practically claimed the greater
share in the victory over Antiochus at all events. Whilst there was peace
between Macedonia and Rome, friendly relations were formed between them
and Perseus. Much against their will they had broken off that friendship,
without his having done anything to deserve such treatment, because the
Romans had thought good to draw them as allies into the war. For three
years they had been suffering many of the evils of war; the sea had been
closed to them, and without supplies by sea their island was in a state
of destitution. They could not put up with this state of things any longer,
and had therefore sent to Macedonia to inform Perseus that the Rhodians
wished him to come to terms with Rome, and they had sent their envoys on
a similar mission to Rome. The Rhodians would consider how they would have
to act against those who prevented the war from being brought to a close.
I am quite certain that even today such language cannot be read or heard
without a deep feeling of indignation. It can then be imagined what the
state of mind of the senators was as they listened to it.
44.15
According to Claudius no reply was vouchsafed to them, but the decree of
the senate was read over, in which the people of Rome made an order that
Caria and Lycia should be free States, and it was decided that this decree
should be at once transmitted to both nations. On hearing this the leader
of the legation, whose boastful language the House had a few moments before
hardly been able to endure, fell down in a state of collapse. Other writers
assert the reply they received was to the following effect: At the outset
of the war the Roman people had ascertained on trustworthy evidence that
the Rhodians had been forming secret designs in conjunction with Perseus
against the Republic, and if there had been any doubt as to this before,
the language of the envoys had now reduced it to a certainty. Dishonest
dealing, even if at the beginning it has been somewhat cautious, generally
betrays itself in the long run. The Rhodians were now acting as arbitrators
of peace and war over the whole world; the Romans were to take up and lay
down their arms at the beck and nod of Rhodes; it was no longer the gods
who were to be invoked as the witnesses and guardians of treaties, but
the Rhodians. Was this really so? Unless they obeyed the orders of Rhodes
and withdrew their armies from Macedonia, were the Rhodians going to consider
what steps to take? What steps they would take the Rhodians knew best,
but the people of Rome would consider, after Perseus had been crushed,
and they hoped that time was not far off, what recompense they should make
to each State according to its deserts in that war. However, a present
of 2000 ases was sent to each of the delegates, but they refused to accept
it.
44.16
The next thing was a despatch from the consul Q. Marcius, which was read
in the senate, describing his march over the mountains and his invasion
of Macedonia. Supplies had been accumulated there and drawn from other
places against the winter, and he had received from the Epirots 20,000
modii of wheat and 10,000 of barley on the understanding that the money
for that corn should be paid to their agents in Rome. Clothing for the
soldiers would have to be sent from Rome; about 200 horses were needed,
mainly for the Numidians; he had no chance of getting them in the country
where he was. The senate made an order that everything should be carried
out in accordance with the consults requirements. The praetor C. Sulpicius
contracted for the supply of 6000 togas, 30,000 tunics and 200 horses to
be transported to Macedonia and delivered to the consul, subject to his
approval. He also paid the Epirot representatives for the corn and introduced
to the senate Onesimus the son of Pytho, a Macedonian of high rank, who
had always urged peaceful counsels on the king and advised him to keep
up the custom, which his father Philip had observed to the last days of
his life, of reading over twice daily the text of his treaty with Rome,
or if he could not always do so, to do it frequently. When he saw that
he could not deter him from war, he gradually withdrew himself on various
pretexts from attendance on the king so that he might not be involved in
proceedings which he did not approve of. At last, when he found that he
had aroused suspicion and that now and again charges of treason were brought
against him, he went over to the Romans and became extremely useful to
the consul.
On his introduction to the senate he mentioned these circumstances,
and the senate made an order for him to be formally enrolled amongst the
allies, quarters and free hospitality to be provided for him, 200 jugera
of the State domain in the Tarentine district to be allotted to him, and
a house to be purchased for him in Tarentum. The praetor C. Decimius was
charged with the execution of this order. On December 13 the censors revised
the roll of burgesses more strictly than on the last occasion. Many of
the equites were degraded; amongst them P. Rutilius who, as tribune of
the plebs, had shown so much bitterness in prosecuting them. He was now
expelled from his tribe and registered among the aerarii. On a resolution
of the senate, half the proceeds of the year's revenue was assigned to
them by the quaestor for the construction of public works. Out of the sum
allotted to him Tiberius Sempronius purchased for the State the dwelling-house
of P. Africanus behind the "Old Shops" by the statue of Vertumnus, together
with the butchers' stalls and the booths adjoining. He also signed a contract
for the construction of the building afterwards known as the Basilica Sempronia.
44.17
It was now near the end of the year and as men's thoughts were mainly preoccupied
with the Macedonian war, there was much discussion as to whom they were
to choose as consuls for the year to bring the war to a close. The senate
accordingly passed a resolution that Cneius Servilius should come to hold
the elections as soon as possible. The praetor Sulpicius forwarded the
resolution to the consul and a despatch was received from him a few days
later which he read to the senate, in which he said that he would come
to the City on . . . The consul arrived in good time and the elections
were held on the day fixed. The new consuls were L. Aemilius Paulus for
the second time, fourteen years after his first consulship, and C. Licinius
Crassus. The election of praetors followed. Anxiety about the Macedonian
war stimulated the senate to expedite all their business. They desired
the consuls designate to ballot for their provinces immediately, so that
as soon as it was known to which consul Macedonia was allotted, and which
praetor was to command the fleet, they might at once form their plans and
make every preparation for the war, and in case the necessity arose, refer
any question to the senate. When they had entered upon office, the magistrates
were to celebrate the Latin Festival at the earliest date which the religious
observances connected with it allowed, in order that nothing might detain
the consul who was to go to Macedonia. Macedonia fell to Aemilius, the
other consular province was Italy and that fell to Licinius. The praetors'
provinces were assigned as follows: Cn. Baebius received the civic and
L. Anicius the alien jurisdiction; the latter was to be at the disposal
of the senate for any special service. Cn. Octavius took the command of
the fleet, P. Fonteius went to Spain, M. Aebutius to Sicily, and C. Papirius
to Sardinia.
44.18
It very soon became clear to everybody that L. Aemilius was not going to
show any lack of energy in the prosecution of the war; amongst other proofs
of this was the exclusive attention he gave night and day to everything
that had to do with it. The very first thing he did was to ask the senate
to send a commission to Macedonia to inspect the armies and the fleet and
to report from their own personal knowledge what was required for the land
and sea forces. They were also to find out what they could about the king's
troops and how much of the country was under our control and how much under
the king's, and whether the Romans were still encamped in mountainous and
difficult country, or whether they had cleared all the passes and reached
open country. Then with regard to our allies they were to ascertain who
were still faithful, who were making their fidelity depend upon the issue
of the war, and what States were openly hostile. They were further to find
out what amount of supplies had been accumulated; from what sources further
supplies could be brought by land or sea; and what were the results of
the year's campaign by land and sea. When accurate information on these
points had been received, it would be possible to form definite plans for
the future. The senate authorised the consul Cn. Servilius to send as commissioners
into Macedonia those whom L. Aemilius approved of. Those selected were
C. Domitius Ahenobarbus, A. Licinius Nerva, and L. Baebius. They started
in two days' time. As the year was closing, reports came in of two showers
of stones: one in the Roman district, the other on Veientine ground. Intercessions
and sacrifices were offered for nine days on each occasion. Two members
of the priesthood died this year: P. Quinctilius Varus, a Flamen of Mars,
and M. Claudius Marcellus, a keeper of the Sacred Books. Cn. Octavius was
appointed in his place. It has been noted as a sign of the increasing scale
on which the Circus games were conducted that in those of the curule aediles
P. Cornelius Scipio Nasica and P. Lentulus, sixty-three African panthers
and forty bears and elephants formed part of the show.
44.19
The new consuls, L. Aemilius Paulus and C. Licinius, entered on their duties
at the beginning of the year, March 15. The senate were mainly anxious
to know what the consul who was to command in Macedonia had to report about
his province. Paulus said that he had nothing to lay before them, as the
commissioners had not yet returned; after being twice driven out of their
course back to Dyrrhachium they were now at Brundisium. When he had received
the necessary information, which would be in a very few days. he would
make his report. That nothing might delay his departure, he had fixed the
Latin Festival for April 12. When the sacrifice had been duly performed,
he and Cn. Octavius would go as soon as the senate authorised their departure.
In his absence it would be his colleague's care to see that whatever had
to be prepared or despatched to the war would be got ready and sent off.
Meantime the foreign deputations could be received in audience.
The first to be called in were the envoys from the two monarchs, Ptolemy
and Cleopatra. They were in mourning garb with beard and hair untrimmed,
and when they entered the House holding the olive branch of supplication,
they prostrated themselves to the ground. Their language was even more
piteous than their dress. Antiochus, king of Syria, who had been in Rome
as a hostage, was now, under the specious pretext of restoring the elder
Ptolemy to his throne, waging war against his younger brother and was threatening
Alexandria at the time. He had won a naval victory off Pelusium, and after
hurriedly throwing a bridge over the Nile he had led his army across, and
was terrifying Alexandria with the prospect of a siege, and it seemed almost
certain that he would gain possession of the powerful realm of Egypt. After
stating these facts the envoys implored the senate, to come to the assistance
of the kingdom and its rulers, who were friends of Rome. They urged that
the kindness which the Roman people had shown to Antiochus and their authority
amongst all kings and nations were such that if they sent word to him and
informed him that the senate disapproved of war being levied against monarchs
who were their friends, he would at once quit the walls of Alexandria and
take his army back to Syria. If the senate hesitated to do this, they would
soon have Ptolemy and Cleopatra coming as fugitives from their realm, and
the Roman people would feel somewhat ashamed at not having sent them help
in their extremity. The senators were much moved by the appeal of the Alexandrians,
and at once sent C. Popilius Laenas, C. Decimius and C. Hostilius to put
an end to the war between the monarchs. They were instructed to approach
Antiochus first and then Ptolemy, and announce to them that if they did
not abstain from war they should not regard the one who was responsible
for its continuance as either a friend or an ally.
44.20
The Roman delegates accompanied by the Alexandrians left in three days'
time. On the last day of the Quinquatrus the commissioners arrived from
Macedonia. Their return had been so anxiously awaited that had it not been
in the evening the consuls would at once have convened the senate. The
next day the senate gave them audience. They reported that the passage
of the army over pathless mountains had resulted in more peril than profit.
They had advanced into Pieria, but the king was holding the country, and
the armies were in such close contact that only the River Enipeus separated
them. The king did not give any opportunity of fighting, nor were our men
strong enough to force a battle; winter, too, had stopped active operations;
our men were living in idleness, and had not corn for more than six . .
. The Macedonians were said to number 30,000 fighting men. If Appius Claudius
had had a strong enough army at Lychnidus, the king might have had his
attention distracted between two fronts; at the present moment, Appius
and such force as he had with him were in the utmost danger, unless either
a regular army was sent there without delay, or they were withdrawn from
their present position. On leaving the camp they proceeded to the fleet.
Here they learnt that some of the crews had been carried off by disease,
some, mostly the Sicilian seamen, had gone home, and the ships were undermanned;
the men who were in them had not received their pay and were without proper
clothing. Eumenes and his fleet had come and gone without any apparent
reason, just as though they had been carried there by the wind; no dependence
could be placed on that king. Whilst all Eumenes's movements were doubtful,
Attalus was behaving with exemplary fidelity.
44.21
When the commissioners had been heard, L. Aemilius said that the question
before the House was the conduct of the war. The senate decreed that the
consuls and the people should each appoint an equal number of military
tribunes for the eight legions, but they wished that none should be appointed
that year who had not held high office; L. Aemilius was to choose out of
the whole number those whom he wished for the two legions in Macedonia,
and when the Latin Festival was over the consul and Cn. Octavius, the praetor
who was to command the fleet, should leave for their respective commands.
In addition to these, L. Anicius, who had the alien jurisdiction, was to
go to Illyria and succeed Appius Claudius in command at Lychnidus. The
task of raising fresh troops was imposed on the consul C. Licinius. He
was ordered to enrol 7000 Roman citizens and 200 cavalry, and from the
Latin allies 7000 infantry and 400 cavalry. He was also to send written
instructions to Cn. Servilius in Gaul, requiring him to enrol 600 cavalry.
He was to send this new army as soon as possible to his colleague in Macedonia.
In that province there were not more than two legions: they were each to
be brought up to the full strength of 6000 infantry and 300 cavalry; the
rest of the infantry and cavalry were to be distributed amongst the various
garrisons; those who were unfit for military service were to be discharged.
There were, in addition, the 10,000 infantry and 800 cavalry furnished
by the allies. This force was supplementary to the two legions, each consisting
of 5000 infantry and 300 cavalry, which Anicius was ordered to transport
to Macedonia; 5000 seamen were also conscripted for the fleet. Licinius
was ordered to hold his province with the two legions and the 10,000 infantry
and 800 cavalry from the allies.
44.22
After the senate had made all these arrangements, the consul L. Aemilius
left the House and proceeded to the Assembly, where he delivered the following
speech: "I think, Quirites, that my having received, through the ballot,
Macedonia as my province has been greeted more warmly than when I was congratulated
on my election as consul, or on the day when I entered on office. And the
sole reason for this, I believe, is that you thought I could be the means
of bringing this long-protracted war to such a close as shall be worthy
of the greatness of Rome. I hope that the decision of the ballot has been
regarded with favour by the gods also, and that they will aid me in executing
the task before me. Some things I can prognosticate, others I can feel
hopeful about. This I venture to affirm with absolute certainty-I will
strive to the utmost of my power, that the hopes you have formed of me
shall not turn out to be vain. All measures necessary for the war the senate
has already taken, and as they have decided that I must start immediately,
and there is nothing to hinder me, my distinguished colleague, C. Licinius,
will carry out those measures with as much energy as if he himself were
going to conduct the war.
"What I write to the senate or to you, I ask you to believe, and not
strengthen, by giving credence to them, the idle rumours of which no one
will confess himself the author. For it is a common experience, and I have
noticed it especially in this war, that no one can be so indifferent to
public opinion as not to find his courage and energy influenced by it.
In all public places where people congregate, and actually-would you believe
it!-in private parties, there are men who know who are leading the armies
into Macedonia, where their camps ought to be placed, what strategical
positions ought to be occupied, when and by what pass Macedonia ought to
be entered, where the magazines are to be formed, by what mode of land
and sea transport supplies are to be conveyed, when actions are to be fought,
and when it is better to remain inactive. And they not only lay down what
ought to be done, but when anything is done contrary to their opinion they
arraign the consul as though he were being impeached before the Assembly.
This greatly interferes with the successful prosecution of a war, for it
is not everybody who can show such firmness and resolution in the teeth
of hostile criticism as Fabius did; he preferred to have his authority
weakened by the ignorance and caprice of the people rather than gain popularity
by disservice to the State. I am not one of those who think that generals
are not to be advised; on the contrary, the man who always acts on his
own initiative shows, in my judgment, more arrogance than wisdom. How then
does the case stand? Commanders ought first of all to get the advice of
thoughtful and far-seeing men who have special experience of military affairs;
then from those who are taking part in the operations, who know the country
and recognise a favourable opportunity when it comes, who, like comrades
on a voyage, share the same dangers. If, then, there is any man who in
the interests of the commonwealth feels confident that he can give me good
advice in the war which I am to conduct, let him not refuse to help his
country, but go with me to Macedonia. I will supply him with a ship, a
horse, a tent, and with his travelling expenses as well. If anyone thinks
this too much trouble, let him not try to act as a sea pilot whilst he
is on land. The city itself affords plenty of subjects for conversation,
let him confine his loquacity to these; he may rest assured that the discussions
in our councils of war will satisfy us." After delivering this speech and
offering the customary sacrifice on the Alban Mount at the Latin Festival
on March 31, the consul left, in company with the praetor, for Macedonia.
It is recorded that the consul was escorted by an unusually large crowd
of well-wishers, and that people predicted with hopeful confidence the
near close of the Macedonian war and the early return and brilliant triumph
of the consul.
44.23
During these proceedings in Italy, Perseus could not make up his mind to
carry out his project of gaining Gentius, king of the Illyrians, as an
ally, as he would have to spend money in so doing. But when he found that
the Romans had cleared the passes and that the supreme crisis of the war
was at hand, he felt that this business ought not to be put off any longer.
Through Hippias, who acted for him, he agreed to pay a sum of 300 silver
talents on condition that hostages were exchanged on both sides. Pantauchus,
one of his closest friends, was sent to complete the transaction. Pantauchus
met the Illyrian king at Meteon in the district of Libea, and there he
received the king's sworn word and the hostages. Gentius sent as his representative
a man called Olympius to claim from Perseus his sworn word and the hostages.
Men were sent with him to receive the money, and at the suggestion of Pantauchus,
Parmenio and Morcus were selected to accompany them to Rhodes. Their instructions
were not to go to Rhodes till they had received the king's sworn word and
the hostages, as at the request of both kings the Rhodians might be induced
to declare war against Rome. The adhesion of that nation, whose naval reputation
was then at its height, would, it was supposed, leave the Romans no hope
of victory either on sea or land. Perseus went from his camp by the Elpeus
with all his cavalry, and met the Illyrians at Dium. There, with the cavalry
drawn up all round them, the contracting parties ratified the covenant
between them, Perseus thinking that their presence at this solemn ratification
would give them fresh courage. Then the hostages were exchanged in the
sight of all; those who were to receive the money were then sent to the
royal treasury at Pella; those who were to accompany the Illyrian envoys
to Rhodes received instructions to embark at Thessalonica. Metrodorus,
who had recently come from Rhodes, was there, and he asserted on the authority
of Dinon and Polyaratus, leading men in the city, that the Rhodians were
prepared for war. He was appointed head of the joint Macedonian and Illyrian
legation.
44.24
At the same time some considerations, suggested by the political conditions
of the time, were submitted in common to Eumenes and Antiochus. Perseus
reminded them that free commonwealths and monarchs are in the nature of
things antagonistic. Rome was attacking them one by one, and what was still
worse, kings were using their power against kings. His own father had been
crushed by the help of Attalus; the attack on Antiochus had been made with
the assistance of Eumenes and, to some extent, of his own father Philip;
now Eumenes and Prusias were in arms against himself. If royalty were abolished
in Macedonia, Asia would be the next. They had already become masters of
some parts of it under the pretext of making the cities free. Then Syria's
turn would come. Prusias was now held in higher honour than Eumenes, and
Antiochus was kept out of the Egypt which he had conquered-the prize of
war. He urged them to reflect on these things, and either insist upon the
Romans making peace with him, or else regard those who persisted in carrying
on an unjust war as the common enemies of all kings. The communication
to Antiochus was sent openly, the emissary to Eumenes was sent ostensibly
to arrange for the ransom of the prisoners. As a matter of fact, more clandestine
negotiations were going on, which for the time aroused suspicion and ill-will
against Eumenes amongst the Romans, and still graver, though unfounded,
charges were made against him, for he was regarded as a traitor and a declared
enemy. There was a Cretan called Cydas, an intimate friend of Eumenes.
This man went with a certain Chimarus, a country man of his, who was serving
under Perseus, to Amphipolis, then afterwards to Demetrias, where he held
conversations under the actual walls of the city, first with Menecrates
and then with Antimachus, both of them generals of Perseus. Hierophon also,
who was the emissary on this occasion, had previously been on two missions
to Eumenes. These secret missions and colloquies were notorious, but what
had actually taken place, or what agreement had been come to between the
monarchs, was not known. The facts were these.
44.25
Eumenes was not eager for Perseus to be victorious, nor had he any intention
of helping him in the war, not so much because of the differences he had
with his father as because of personal aversion he and the son felt for
each other. The jealousy of the two monarchs was such that Eumenes would
not have seen with complacency Perseus winning such an accession of power
and glory as would have awaited him had he defeated the Romans. He knew
also that from the very beginning of the war Perseus had tried every means
of gaining peace, and the nearer the danger the more his actions and thoughts
were, day and night, turned to this object. As regarded the Romans, he
believed that since the war had dragged on longer than they expected, both
their generals and the senate would not be averse from bringing to a close
such a tedious and difficult war. Having thus discovered what both sides
wished for, he was all the more desirous of winning their good graces by
offering for a consideration his assistance towards securing what he believed
would come about of itself through the weariness of the stronger and the
fears of the weaker side. He fixed his price in the one case for not lending
assistance to the Romans either by land or sea, and in the other for mediating
peace. For refusing assistance he asked 1000 talents, for bringing about
peace, 1500. Impelled by his fears Perseus was very prompt in commencing
negotiations and made no delay in discussing the question of hostages;
it was settled that those whom he received should be sent to Crete. But
when it came to the mention of money he drew back and said that a money
payment for another object would, between monarchs of so great a name,
be in any case sordid and unbecoming both to him who made it and him who
accepted it. Still in the hope of obtaining peace with Rome he did not
grudge the expense, though he would only hand over the money when the transaction
was completed; meanwhile he would deposit it in the temple at Samothrace.
As that island belonged to Perseus, Eumenes saw that it made no difference
whether it were there or at Pella, and he proposed to carry away a portion
at once. Thus after trying unsuccessfully to trick each other they gained
nothing but an evil name.
44.26
This was not the only chance which Perseus threw away in his avarice. Had
he paid the money, it is possible that he might have had peace through
Eumenes's instrumentality, and this was worth purchasing even at the cost
of a part of his kingdom, or if Eumenes had played him false he could have
held him up as his enemy loaded with his gold, and made the Romans regard
him justly as their enemy. But the alliance with Gentius which had been
already mooted and the invaluable support now offered of the Gauls who
were pouring through Illyria, were both lost to him through his avarice.
A body of 1000 cavalry came to offer their services, and with them the
same number of foot soldiers. These latter used to run alongside the horses
and when the trooper fell they seized the riderless horses and rode on
them into the battle. These men had agreed to serve for ten gold pieces
for each horseman and five for each footman; their leaders were to receive
a thousand. Perseus went with half his whole force from his camp at the
Elpeus and began to give notice through all the villages and cities adjoining
their route that they were to prepare ample supplies of corn, wine and
cattle. He took with him some horses with their trappings and some military
cloaks as presents to their officers, and a small quantity of gold to be
distributed amongst a few of the troops, trusting that the mass of the
soldiery would be attracted by the hope of more. He went as far as the
city of Almana and fixed his camp by the River Axius. The Gaulish army
was lying in the neighbourhood of Desudaba in Maedica waiting for the stipulated
pay. Perseus sent Antigonus, one of the nobles of his Court, to order the
soldiers to shift their camp to Bylazora, a place in Paeonia, and their
officers to go in a body to him. They were seventy-five miles distant from
the king's camp on the Axius. After Antigonus had given them these orders
and told them what an abundance of everything the king's care had provided
for them on their line of march, and what presents of clothing and silver
and horses the king had ready for the officers when they arrived, they
replied that they would find out all about this on the spot. They then
enquired whether they had brought the gold to be distributed according
to the agreement amongst the horse and foot. To this there was no reply.
Then their chief Claudicus said, "Go back! Tell the king the Gauls will
not move a step further unless they receive the gold and the hostages."
On this being reported to the king he held a council of war. When it became
obvious what the unanimous decision would be, the king began to descant
on the perfidy and savagery of the Gauls, vices which many had already
experienced to their ruin. It was a dangerous thing to admit so vast a
multitude into Macedonia; they might find them more troublesome as allies
than the Romans as enemies; 5000 cavalry were quite enough to make use
of in the war, and not too many to be dangerous.
44.27
It was quite clear to every one that the only thing the king was afraid
of was having to pay such a large host, and as no one had the courage to
attempt to dissuade him, Antigonus was sent back to say that the king would
only employ 5000 of their cavalry and would not detain the rest. When the
barbarians heard this, there were murmurs of indignation from the rest
of the army at having been called away from their homes to no purpose.
Claudicus again enquired whether he would pay the stipulated sum to the
5000. He detected something evasive in the answer and sent the crafty messenger
back unhurt-treatment which the man himself hardly ventured to hope for.
The Gauls returned to the Hister, devastating those parts of Thrace which
lay near their line of march. This band might have been led against the
Romans through the mountain pass of Perrhaebia into Thessaly while the
king remained quiet at the Elpeus, and could not only have plundered and
stripped the fields so that the Romans could have looked for no supplies
from those districts, but also have utterly destroyed the cities to prevent
their affording any assistance to their allies, while Perseus was holding
the Romans at the Elpeus. The Romans would have had to think of their own
safety, for they could not have stayed where they were when Thessaly which
fed their army was lost, nor could they have made any advance with the
camp of the Macedonians in front of them. By losing such an opportunity
Perseus encouraged the Romans and discouraged to a great extent the Macedonians
who had hung their hopes on his taking advantage of it.
The same niggardly conduct turned Gentius against him. After he had
paid 300 talents to the emissaries of Gentius at Pella, he allowed them
to seal the money up. Then ten talents were sent to Pantauchus with instructions
that they were to be given to the king at once. He told his people, who
were carrying the rest of the money sealed with the seal of the Illyrians,
to make short journeys, and when they had reached the frontier, to wait
there for his instructions. After Gentius had received that small portion
of the money, he was constantly being urged by Pantauchus to provoke the
Romans by some hostile act; accordingly he threw the two Roman envoys into
prison, who happened to be with him at the time, M. Perpenna and L. Petilius.
On hearing this, Perseus thought that Gentius was, in any case, driven
by the force of circumstances into war with Rome, and in this belief he
sent a message to have the money brought back, as though his one idea was
that after his defeat as much spoil as possible might be reserved for the
Romans. Hierophon returned from Eumenes without any one knowing what secret
understanding had been arrived at between them. They themselves gave it
out in public that it had to do with the exchange of prisoners, and Eumenes
sent the same explanation to the consul to allay his suspicions.
44.28
Seeing how his schemes had miscarried, Perseus sent his two naval commanders,
Antenor and Calippus, with forty swift ships and five cutters to Tenedos
to protect the corn ships which were making their way to Macedonia through
the scattered groups of the Cyclades. The ships took the water at Cassandrea,
in the two harbours under Mount Athos, and from there sailed to Tenedos
in a calm sea. Some undecked vessels belonging to Rhodes were lying in
the harbour and Eudamus, their commander, was allowed to take them away
unharmed, as though they were friends. On learning that fifty of his transports
on the other side of the island were blockaded by the war-galleys of Eumenes
which were stationed at the entrance to the harbour, Antenor promptly sailed
round and the enemy ships made off on his appearance. Ten swift ships were
told off to escort the transports to Macedonia, and when they had seen
them safe they were to return to Tenedos. Eight days afterwards they rejoined
the fleet which was now anchored off Sigeum. From here they sailed to Sabota,
an island situated between Elaea and Chios. The day after they arrived,
thirty-five vessels called "hippagogi," carrying Gaulish horses and troopers,
happened to be on their way from Elaea to Phanae, a headland in Chios,
intending to sail from there to Macedonia. They were sent to Attalus by
Eumenes. When Antenor received a signal that these ships were at sea, he
started for Sabota and met them in the narrowest part of the channel between
the headland of Erythrae and Chios. The last thing that Eumenes's officers
expected was the appearance of a Macedonian fleet cruising in those waters.
They first thought that they were Romans and then that it was Attalus or
some that had been sent back by Attalus from the Roman camp and were on
their way to Pergamum. But when the build of the approaching vessels could
no longer be mistaken and the prows steering straight for them at increasing
speed revealed the approach of an enemy, there was great alarm. The clumsy
nature of their ships and the difficulty of keeping the Gauls quiet, destroyed
all hope of resistance. Some of those who were nearer to the mainland swam
to Erythrae; others crowded on all sail and ran their ships aground in
Chios, and, abandoning the horses, fled in wild disorder towards the city.
But the Macedonian vessels, taking a shorter course, landed their marines
nearer the city and some of the Gauls were cut down as they fled along
the road, others outside the city gate. The Chians had closed their gates,
not knowing who were fleeing and who were pursuing. Nearly 800 Gauls were
killed and 200 made prisoners. Some of the horses in the wrecked ships
were drowned; others were hamstrung by the Macedonians on the beach. There
were twenty horses of exceptional beauty, and Antenor gave orders for the
ten vessels which he had previously sent to carry these and the prisoners
to Thessalonica and return as soon as possible; he should wait for them
at Phanae. The fleet lay off Chios for three days and then sailed to Phanae.
The ten ships returned sooner than was expected; the whole fleet then put
out to sea and sailed across the Aegean to Delos.
44.29
During these operations the Roman commissioners, C. Popilius, C. Decimius
and C. Hostilius, left Chalcis with three quinqueremes and arrived at Delos.
There they found the forty vessels belonging to the Macedonians and five
quinqueremes belonging to Eumenes. The sanctity of the temple and the island
prevented them from injuring one another. The Romans, the Macedonians and
the crews from Eumenes' ships went about together in the city and the temple
in the peaceful security of a locality sacred and inviolate. Antenor received
a signal from the look-out that several transports were sailing past. He
started in pursuit with some of his ships and dispersed the rest among
the Cyclades. He either sunk or plundered them all, with the exception
of those heading for Macedonia. Popilius tried to save all he could, both
of his own ships and those of Eumenes, but the Macedonian barques sailed
by night, two or three together, and so escaped observation. About this
time the Macedonian and Illyrian envoys arrived in Rhodes. Their representations
had all the more weight owing to the appearance of the Macedonian ships
cruising amongst the Cyclades and in the Aegean, the united action which
Perseus and Gentius were taking, and the rumour that the Gauls were coming
with a large force of infantry and cavalry. Dinon and Polyaratus, the leaders
of Perseus' faction, felt themselves now strong enough to send a favourable
reply to the two monarchs, and even went so far as to proclaim publicly
that they possessed sufficient authority to put an end to the war, the
kings themselves therefore must resign themselves to the acceptance of
peace terms.
44.30
It was now the beginning of spring, and the new generals had reached their
provinces. The consul Aemilius was in Macedonia, Octavius with the fleet
at Oreum, and Anicius was in Illyria to conduct the war against Gentius.
The father of Gentius was Pleuratus, formerly king of Illyria; his mother's
name was Eurydice. Gentius had two brothers, one named Plator, the other,
a half-brother, named Caravantius. He felt no uneasiness about the latter,
as the father was a man of low birth, but to make his throne more secure
he put Plator to death, and two of his friends with him, Ettritus and Epicadus,
both of them able and enterprising men. It was commonly said that his jealousy
was aroused by Plator's betrothal to Etuta, a daughter of Monunus, the
prince of the Dardani, as though by this marriage he would secure the whole
nation to his interest, and the fact that after Plator's death his brother
married the girl made this conjecture highly probable. When all fear of
his brother was removed, Gentius began to harass and oppress his people,
and his naturally violent temper was inflamed by excessive indulgence in
wine. However, as I have said above, he was bent upon war with Rome, and
assembled the whole of his forces at Lissus. They numbered 15,000 men.
He sent his brother Caravantius with 1000 infantry and 500 horse to effect
the subjugation of the Cavii, either by intimidation or force, whilst he
himself advanced against Bassania, a city five miles distant from Lissus.
The population were friendly to Rome, and when Caravantius sent a demand
for submission they chose to stand a siege rather than surrender. One of
the towns belonging to the Cavii, Durnium, opened its gates to Caravantius;
another city, Caravandis, shut its gates against him, and when he began
an extensive devastation of their fields the peasants rose and killed a
considerable number of the scattered plunderers.
By this time Appius Claudius, who had strengthened the army he had with
him by contingents from the Ballini, the Apolloniates and the Dyrrhachians,
had left his winter quarters and was encamped near the River Genusus. The
intelligence brought to him of the league between Perseus and Gentius,
and the outrageous treatment of the Roman envoys, decided him to commence
hostilities against him. The praetor Anicius, who was at this time in Apollonia,
heard what was going on in Illyria, and sent a message to Appius requesting
him to wait for him by the Genusus. In three days he arrived at the camp
and brought with him in addition to his own force 2000 infantry and 200
cavalry, sent by the Parthini, the infantry under the command of Epicadus,
the cavalry under that of Algalus. He was making preparations to march
into Illyria, his principal object being the raising of the siege of Bassania.
The projected invasion was delayed by a report that eighty pirate barques
were ravaging the coast. They had been sent by Gentius on the advice of
Pantauchus to devastate the fields of Apollonia and Dyrrhachium. Then the
fleet . . . they surrendered.
44.31
One after another the cities in that part of the country took the same
course; their natural inclinations were strengthened by the clemency and
justice with which the Roman praetor treated them all. He marched on to
Scodra, the most important place in the war. Gentius had selected it as
the stronghold, so to speak, of his kingdom, and it was by far the most
strongly fortified and most difficult of access of any place in the country
of the Libeates. It is surrounded by two rivers, the Clausal on the eastern
side and the Barbanna, which rises in the Libeatus Lake, on the west. These
two rivers meet and flow into the Oriundis, which rises in Mount Scordus
and, augmented by many tributaries in its course, empties itself into the
Hadriatic. Mount Scordus is quite the loftiest mountain in the country,
and overlooks Dardania on the east, Macedonia on the south, and Illyria
on the west. Although the town was protected by its situation and defended
by the whole strength of Illyria under the king himself, the Roman praetor
determined to attack it. His first operations had been successful, and
he believed that the same good fortune would carry him through, and that
the alarm created by his sudden appearance would have its effect. Had the
gates been kept shut and the defenders stationed on the walls and towers,
the attempt would have failed and the Romans would have been driven away
from the walls. As it was, however, they made a sortie from the gate, and
they began a battle on open ground with more courage than they kept it
up. They were driven back, and more than 200 men were killed as they squeezed
together in their flight through the confined space of the gate. This created
such a panic that Gentius at once sent two of the foremost men in the country,
Teuticus and Bellus, to the praetor to ask for a cessation of hostilities,
to allow him time to consider his position. He was allowed three days-the
Roman camp was only five miles away-and went on board ship and sailed up
the Barbanna to Lake Libeatus as though in quest of a retired spot for
reflection but, as it turned out, he had been misled by a false report
that his brother Caravantius was approaching with several thousand men,
whom he had raised in the country to which he had been sent. After the
rumour proved groundless he went down in the same ship to Scodra, and sent
to ask for permission to interview the praetor. His request was granted
and he went to the camp. He began his speech by blaming his own folly,
and then, falling on his knees, amidst tears and supplications he placed
himself entirely in the hands of the praetor. He was told to be of good
courage, and even received an invitation to supper. He went back to the
city to see his friends, and was for that day treated with all honour at
the praetor's table. The next thing was his being handed over to the custody
of C. Cassius, one of the military tribunes, after having, himself a king,
received from a king a paltry ten talents-hardly as much as a gladiator
earns-in order that he might sink into this condition.
44.32
After the capture of Scodra the first thing Anicius did was to order the
two envoys, Petilius and Perpenna, to be found and brought to him. They
were provided with the clothing and insignia of their rank, and Perpenna
was at once sent to arrest the friends and kinsfolk of the king. He went
to Metione and brought back to the camp at Scodra Etleva, the king's wife,
and his two sons, Scerdilaedus and Pleuratus, and also Caravantius his
brother. Anicius had brought the war in Illyria to a close in less than
a month, and Perpenna was sent to Rome to announce his victory. A few days
later he sent Gentius to Rome, together with his mother, his wife, his
children and his brother, and also some of the principal men of Illyria.
This is the only war the close of which was reported in Rome before they
had heard that it had begun. All through this time, Perseus on his side
was in a state of great alarm by the advance of the consul Aemilius who,
he understood, was on the march in a most dangerous mood, and no less so
by the forward movement of Octavius with the Roman fleet menacing the coast.
Eumenes and Athenagoras were in command of Thessalonica with a small force
of 2000 cetrati. He sent Androcles there also with orders to remain encamped
close to the naval arsenal; 1000 cavalry under Creon of Antigonea were
sent to Aenea to guard the coast, so that at whatever point they heard
the hostile ships were threatening, they might at once go to the help of
the country folk; 5000 Macedonians were sent to garrison Pytho and Petra
under the command of Histieaus, Theogenes and Midon. After they had left,
Perseus set himself to fortify the bank of the Elpeus, because, as the
river-bed was now dry, it could easily be crossed. To allow of the whole
army being free for this work, supplies of food were brought into the camp
by women from the neighbouring cities. Out of the woods near the soldiers
were ordered . . .
44.33
Lastly he ordered the water-carriers to follow him to the sea, which was
less than 300 paces distant, and to dig at short intervals from each other
on the shore. The towering height of the mountains led him to expect that
as no rivulets flowed from above the ground they contained hidden streams
which flowed as it were through veins into the sea and mingled with its
waters. Hardly had the surface of the sand been removed when springs bubbled
up, muddy at first and scanty, but they soon poured forth a clear and copious
supply of water, as though it were a gift from the gods. This incident
added much to their general's prestige and authority amongst the soldiers.
Orders were then issued for the troops to get their arms ready, and the
consul with the military tribunes and the centurions of the first rank
went out to examine the place where they were to cross, where the men under
arms could find an easy descent, and where the ascent of the opposite bank
presented least difficulty. After satisfying himself on these points, the
consul's first care was that everything should be done in an orderly fashion
and without confusion, in obedience to the word of command. When an order
was promulgated to all the troops at the same time, it was not distinctly
heard by everybody, and in their uncertainty as to what had been said,
some made additions for themselves and went beyond what had been ordered,
while some did less than they were told to do. Then confused shouts arose
throughout the column and the enemy knew the general's intentions before
they did. He therefore gave directions for the military tribunes to communicate
the order privately to the first centurion of the legion and he was to
notify what was to be done to each of the centurions, rank by rank, whether
the order was to be transmitted from front to rear of the column or from
rear to front. He also forbade the sentinels to follow the new fashion
of wearing their shields; a sentinel did not go into battle to make use
of his arms; his duty was on becoming aware of the enemy's approach to
retire and call the rest to arms. They used to stand, wearing their helmets
and holding their shields in front of them, and then, when they were tired,
they leaned on their spears, rested their heads on the rim of their shields
and went to sleep as they stood, so that the glitter of their armour made
them visible to the enemy while they themselves saw nothing in front of
them. He also altered the regulations with regard to the outlying pickets.
They used to stand all day under arms, the cavalry with their horses bridled,
and in the days of summer under a cloudless and scorching sun, the men
themselves and their horses were so languid and exhausted by the heat after
so many hours that often, when attacked by a small body of the enemy who
were fresh and unwearied, they were discomfited, though greatly superior
in numbers. He thereupon gave orders that those who were sent out in the
morning should quit their posts at noon and be relieved by others who went
on duty for the rest of the day. In this way it was never possible for
a fresh and unwearied enemy to attack them when they were suffering from
fatigue.
44.34
After Aemilius had paraded his troops and announced to them his intention
of making these reforms, he went on to address them on very much the same
lines as in his speech to the Assembly. He reminded them that it was the
duty of the commander alone to provide for the welfare of his army and
to advise as to what ought to be done, sometimes alone and sometimes in
consultation with those whom he has called into council. Those who were
not called into council had no right to ventilate their own opinions either
publicly or privately. It was the soldier's duty to be careful about these
three things: To keep his body as strong and agile as possible; to keep
his arms in good order, and to have his food ready against any sudden order
of his commander. All other matters, he must understand, are under the
care of the gods and of his general. In an army where the soldiers take
upon them to give advice and the general is swayed by the opinions of the
multitude, there is no safety. He, as their commander, would do his duty
and be on the watch to give them an opportunity of fighting a successful
battle. It was not for them to ask what was going to happen, as soon as
the signal was given, it was their duty to do all that a soldier could
do.
With these instructions he dismissed the troops, and even the veterans
generally confessed that on that day they had for the first time, as though
they were raw recruits, learnt what military service meant. And it was
not only by remarks of this kind that they showed how greatly they appreciated
the consul's words-they began at once to act on them. In a short time you
would see no one in the camp idle; some were sharpening their swords; others
rubbing up their helmets and cheek-pieces and their cuirasses; others fastening
on their armour and testing their agility under its weight; others poising
their spears; others again making their swords flash with rapid thrusts
and keeping their eyes on the point. So that anyone could easily see that
on the very first opportunity of coming to close quarters with the enemy
they would finish the war by a splendid victory or, in their own case,
by a glorious death. Perseus, too, when he saw that after the consul's
arrival-it was the beginning of spring as well-all was bustle and movement
with the enemy as though for a fresh campaign, and that the camp was shifted
from Phila to the bank of the river, and the consul was going on his rounds,
at one time to inspect the works and evidently looking out for a place
where he could cross the river; at another . . .
44.35
This incident raised the spirits of the Romans and produced considerable
alarm amongst the Macedonians and their king. At first he tried to stifle
the report by sending to Pantauchus, who was on his way to the camp, to
forbid him from entering it; but some boys, who were being taken away amongst
the Illyrian hostages, had been seen by their friends. So the greater the
pains taken to conceal the details, the more easily did they leak out through
the love of gossip in the king's Court. Just after this the envoys from
Rhodes arrived at the Roman camp bringing with them the same demand for
peace which had so roused the ire of the Roman senate. They received a
much more hostile hearing from the council of war in the camp. Some thought
they ought to be driven helter-skelter out of the camp; the consul said
he would give them an answer in a fortnight's time. Meanwhile, to make
it clear how far the influence of the Rhodians extended in their efforts
to bring about peace, he began to discuss the plan of operations with his
council. Some, mainly the younger officers, were for crossing the Elpeus
and storming the opposite bank and the defensive works above it. After
their expulsion the year before from their forts, which were on higher
ground, better fortified and strongly held, they thought the Macedonians
would be unable to stand a general attack made in full force. Others were
of opinion that Octavius ought to take his fleet to Thessalonica and devastate
the coast. By thus menacing his rear they would compel the king to divide
his forces and march away to protect the interior of his kingdom, thus
leaving the passage of the river in some direction open. The consul considered
the river bank insurmountable, owing to its steepness and the works which
defended it, especially as artillery was in position everywhere, and he
had heard that the enemy used their missile weapons more skillfully, and
with a surer aim.
The consul had quite made up his mind to adopt another course, and the
council broke up. There were two Perrhaebian traders, Coenus and Menophilus,
whose honesty and sagacity he knew he could trust. He sent for them and
questioned them privately about the routes leading into Perrhaebia. They
told him that the country was not difficult; it was held by detachments
of the king's troops. Hearing this he thought that by a sudden night attack
delivered in force, when the enemy were not expecting it, they could be
dislodged and driven back. Javelins and arrows and other missiles were
useless in the dark, when it was impossible to see what to aim at; it was
in close hand-to-hand fighting with the sword, in the melee of battle,
that the Roman soldier was victorious. He decided to take these men as
guides, and sent for Octavius, to whom he explained his plans, and he gave
him instructions to sail to Heracleum and have in readiness ten days' rations
for 1000 men. P. Scipio Nasica and Q. Fabius Maximus, his own son, were
sent overland to Heracleum with 5000 select troops, as though they were
going on board the fleet to devastate the Macedonian coast-the scheme which
had been advocated in the council. They were privately informed that, to
avoid any delay, there was food ready for these troops on board the fleet.
The two guides were then ordered so to regulate the length of each day's
march as to allow of an attack being made on Pythium in the fourth watch
of the third day.
To prevent the king from directing his attention elsewhere, the consul,
at dawn on the following day, commenced an action with the enemy's outposts
in the middle of the river-bed, and the fighting was kept up by the light
infantry on both sides; heavier troops could not possibly fight on such
uneven ground. From the top of each bank down to the river-bed was about
300 paces; the actual channel of the river between the banks, which varied
in depth, was over a mile wide. There in mid-channel the fight went on,
the king watching it from his intrenchments on the one side and the consul
from the rampart surrounded by his legionaries on the other. As long as
they were not in touch and could use their missiles the king's men fought
at an advantage, but when it came to close fighting the Roman was more
steady and better protected, whether by the shield or the Ligurian buckler.
About noon the consul ordered the retreat to be sounded, so the action
was broken off for that day with a not inconsiderable number killed on
both sides. The next day the conflict was renewed at sunrise with even
greater bitterness, as their passions had been roused by the previous contest.
But the Romans were wounded, not only by those with whom they were actually
fighting, but to a much greater extent by the missiles of every kind which
were discharged by the multitude of assailants posted on the turrets, and
especially by the huge stones from the ballistae. Whenever they got nearer
to the bank held by the enemy the discharges from the catapults reached
even the hindmost. After losing far more on that day, the consul recalled
his men somewhat later than the day before. On the third day he abstained
from fighting and went down to the lowest part of the camp, as if to attempt
a passage through that part of the enemy's line, which was carried down
to the sea. . . .
44.36
It was past the summer solstice and the time of day was approaching noon;
the march had been made amidst clouds of dust and under a burning sun.
Lassitude and thirst were already felt, and it was certain that both would
be aggravated at high noon. The consul was determined not to expose his
men while thus suffering to an enemy who was fresh and in full vigour.
But such was the eagerness of the men for battle under any circumstances
that it needed as much skill on the part of the consul to beguile his own
men as to deceive the enemy. The battle line was not completely formed,
and he urged the military tribunes to hasten its formation; he rode round
the ranks and fired the spirits of the men by his words. On this they at
first eagerly demanded the signal for battle; then under the increasing
heat their faces showed less animation and their voices became weaker;
some hung over their shields and propped themselves up with their spears.
Now at last he gave the order to the centurions of the first rank to mark
out the front line for a camp and to deposit the baggage. When the soldiers
became aware of what was happening, some openly expressed their delight
that he had not compelled them to fight, exhausted as they were with the
toilsome march and the intense heat. The staff officers and the commandants
of the foreign contingents, Attalus amongst them, were standing round the
commander-in-chief and unanimously approving of what they thought was his
decision, namely, to give battle. Not even to them had he disclosed his
intention of delaying action. The sudden change of plan made nearly all
of them silent. Nasica alone had the courage to admonish the consul not
to do as former commanders had done, and by avoiding battle let the enemy
slip through his fingers. If Perseus got away in the night, he was afraid
that infinite trouble and danger would be incurred in following him into
the heart of Macedonia, and they would spend the summer as previous generals
had done, in feeling their way through the passes and tracks of the Macedonian
mountains. He strongly advised the consul to attack the enemy while he
had him in level and open country, and not to lose the proffered chance
of victory. The consul was not at all offended at the frank admonition
of so distinguished a youth. "Nasica," he replied, "I, too, once felt as
you do now, and one day you will feel as I do now. I have learnt, through
the many accidents of war, when to fight and when to abstain from fighting.
I have no time now, standing as I am at the head of the line, to explain
to you why it is better to rest today. Ask me for my reasons some other
time; for the time being you will be content to submit to the authority
of a veteran commander." The young man was silent; he was sure that his
general saw some impediments in the way of a battle which were not apparent
to him.
44.37
When Aemilius Paulus saw that the site of the camp had been marked out
and the baggage collected, he first quietly withdrew the triarii from the
back of the line, then the principes, leaving the hastati standing in front,
in case the enemy made any movement. Finally he retired these also, withdrawing
those on the right first, maniple by maniple. In this way the infantry
were withdrawn without creating any confusion, leaving the cavalry and
light infantry facing the enemy. The cavalry were not recalled from their
position until the rampart and fosse in front of the camp were carried
their full length. The king was quite ready to give battle that day, but
as his men were aware that the delay was due to the enemy he was quite
content, and he too led his men back to camp. When the fortification of
the camp was completed, C. Sulpicius Gallus, a military tribune attached
to the second legion, who had been a praetor the year before, obtained
the consul's permission to call the soldiers on parade. He then explained
that on the following night the moon would lose her light from the second
hour to the fourth, and no one must regard this as a portent, because this
happened in the natural order of things at stated intervals, and could
be known beforehand and predicted. Just in the same way, then, as they
did not regard the regular rising and setting of the sun and moon or the
changes in the light of the moon from full circle to a thin and waning
crescent as a marvel, so they ought not to take its obscuration when it
is hidden in the shadow of the earth for a supernatural portent. On the
next night-September 4-the eclipse took place at the stated hour, and the
Roman soldiers thought that Gallus possessed almost divine wisdom. It gave
a shock to the Macedonians as portending the fall of their kingdom and
the ruin of their nation, nor could their soothsayers give any other explanation.
Shouts and howls went on in the Macedonian camp until the moon emerged
and gave her light. So keen had both sides been to encounter one another
that on the morrow both Perseus and the consul were alike blamed by some
of their own men for having retired without a battle The king was at no
loss for his defence-the enemy had openly declined battle and was the first
to withdraw his troops into camp; and, besides, the position which he had
chosen was such that the phalanx could not be brought up to it, even a
slightly uneven ground would make it useless. As to the consul, not only
did it look as if he had let slip the opportunity of fighting the previous
day and given the enemy a chance, if he wished, of going away in the night,
but even now he seemed to be wasting time on the pretext of offering sacrifice,
although the signal for battle had been hoisted at dawn and he ought to
have taken the field. It was not till the third hour after the sacrifices
had been duly performed that he summoned a council of war and even then
he was thought by some to be wasting the time, which ought to have been
spent on the battlefield, in unseasonable speeches and discussions.
44.38
The consul addressed the council as follows: "Out of all those who were
in favour of my giving battle yesterday, P. Nasica, a most excellent young
man, was the only one who disclosed his real thoughts to me, and after
that he remained silent, so that it would seem that he has come over to
my side. There are some others who preferred to find fault with their commander
behind his back rather than offer their advice in his presence. I have
no objection to giving my reasons for delaying battle to you, Nasica, and
to all who entertain the same sentiments as you did, though less openly,
for I am so far from regretting our inaction yesterday that I believe I
have saved the army through it. If any of you think that I have no grounds
for this belief, I ask him to consider with me, if he will, how many things
there were in the enemy's favour and to our disadvantage. First of all,
as to his superiority in numbers, I am perfectly certain that none of you
were unaware how great that is and especially yesterday when you watched
his men deploying into line. Out of our own scanty numbers one-fourth had
been left to guard the baggage, and you know that it is not the least efficient
who are left in charge of that. But supposing we had been in full force,
are we to take no account of the fact that we have remained undisturbed
in the camp last night, ready with the help of the gods to take the field
this very day or, at the latest, tomorrow? Is it a matter of indifference
whether you order the soldier to take up his arms on a day when he has
not been fatigued by a toilsome march and the labour of intrenching the
camp, when he has been resting undisturbed in his tent, and so lead him
into battle full of energy and vigorous in body and mind, or whether on
the other hand you expose him fatigued by a long march and exhausted by
the work of preparing the camp, with the sweat pouring from him and his
jaws parched with thirst, his mouth and eyes full of dust, under a scorching
noonday sun, to an enemy who is fresh, rested and bringing into battle
a strength and energy which have not been used up beforehand? Who, in heaven's
name, being thus prepared for battle, even though he were an utter coward,
would not conquer the bravest of men? After the enemy had, quite at their
leisure, formed their line, their minds prepared for battle, and all standing
in their ordered ranks, do you suppose that we were then to form our line
in haste and confusion and meet them when we were in disorder?
44.39
"Some might say: 'Even if we had not our battle line in proper formation,
had we no fortified camp, no provision for water, no troops to guard the
access to it? Had we nothing which we could call our own except the bare
ground on which to fight?' Your ancestors looked upon a camp as a safe
haven for the army against every mischance, from which they went out to
battle, where, after being tossed in the storm of battle, they could find
a safe retreat. It was for that reason that after they had fenced it with
earthworks, they strengthened it with a powerful guard, for he who lost
his camp, even if victorious on the field, was held to be defeated. A camp
is a resting-place for the victor, a shelter for the vanquished. How many
armies to whom the fortune of battle has proved unkindly have been driven
inside their ramparts and then at their own time, sometimes almost immediately,
have made a sortie and repulsed their victorious foe? Here is the soldier's
second fatherland, here is his abode, with the rampart for its walls; here
each finds in his tent, his home and his household gods. Ought we to have
fought as homeless wanderers with no place to receive us after our victory?
"In reply to these difficulties and hindrances it is asked, 'What if
the enemy had gone off last night?' How much exhausting toil should we
have had to endure in following him into the heart of Macedonia! I am perfectly
certain that if he had decided to depart he would not have awaited us,
nor drawn up his troops on the field. How much easier would it have been
for him to get away when we were at a distance, than it is now when we
are close upon him and he cannot withdraw by day or night without our becoming
aware of it! What could we wish for better than, instead of being obliged
to attack their camp in its strong position on the bank of a river, fenced
with a rampart and numerous towers, we attack them in the rear after they
have left their intrenchments and are making their way in a straggling
column through open country? These were my reasons for postponing the battle
from yesterday to today, for it is my intention to give battle, and as
the way to the enemy across the Elpeus has been blocked by him, I have
opened up a fresh way by dislodging his men who were holding another pass,
and I shall not stop till I have brought the war to a close."
44.40
When he had finished there was silence; some had been brought round to
his view; others were afraid of giving needless offence by criticising
the neglect of an opportunity which, to whatever it might be due, could
not be remedied. Even on this day neither the consul nor the king was prepared
to engage. The king would not be able to attack them as they were yesterday,
wearied with their march, deploying hurriedly into line and not in battle
order; the consul held back because neither wood nor fodder had been brought
into the newly-formed camp, and a large proportion of his troops had left
the camp to collect these from the fields near. Against the intention of
both commanders Fortune, who overrides the plans of men, brought about
a conflict. There was a river, not a large one, near the enemy's camp from
which both the Romans and the Macedonians drew their water, protected by
detachments stationed on either bank. On the Roman side were two cohorts,
Marrucinians and Paelignians, and two squadrons of Samnite horse under
the command of M. Sergius Silus. Another body was stationed in front of
the camp under C. Cluvius; these consisted of Firman, Vestinian and Cremensian
troops, and two squadrons of cavalry from Placentia and Aeserna. Whilst
all was quiet at the river, neither side offering any provocation, a mule
broke loose about three o'clock in the afternoon from the men in charge
and escaped to the opposite bank. Three soldiers went after it through
the water, which was up to their knees. Two Thracians were dragging the
beast out of the river back to their own bank, when they were followed
by some Romans, who killed one of them, recaptured the mule, and went back
to their posts. There were 800 Thracians guarding the enemy's bank. A few
of these, enraged at seeing a comrade killed before their eyes, ran across
the river in pursuit of those who slew him; then more joined in and at
last the whole body, and with them the . . .
44.41
. . . led them into battle. His men were deeply impressed by reverence
for his authority, the reputation he had acquired, and, above all, his
age, for though more than sixty years old, he took upon himself to a large
extent the duties and dangers which are usually the lot of younger men.
The interval between the "caetrati" and the divisions of the phalanx was
filled up by the legion, and thus the enemy's line was interrupted. The
"caetrati" were in their rear; the legion were fronting the shieldmen of
the phalanx, who were known as the "chalcaspides." L. Albinus, an ex-consul,
was ordered to lead the second legion against the phalanx of "leucaspides";
these formed the centre of the enemy's line. On the Roman right, where
the battle had begun, close to the river, he brought up the elephants and
the cohorts of allied troops. It was here that the Macedonians first gave
ground. For just as most new devices amongst men seem valuable as far as
words go, but when they are put to a practical test and have to be acted
upon they fail to produce results, so it was with the elephants; those
of the Macedonians were of no use whatever. The contingents of the Latin
allies followed up the charge of the elephants and repulsed the left wing.
The second legion which had been sent against the centre broke up the phalanx.
The most probable explanation of the victory is that several separate engagements
were going on all over the field, which first shook the phalanx out of
its formation and then broke it up. As long as it was compact, its front
bristling with levelled spears, its strength was irresistible. If by attacking
them at various points you compel them to bring round their spears, which
owing to their length and weight are cumbersome and unwieldy, they become
a confused and involved mass, but if any sudden and tumultuous attack is
made on their flank or rear, they go to pieces like a falling house. In
this way they were forced to meet the repeated charges of small bodies
of Roman troops with their front dislocated in many places, and wherever
there were gaps the Romans worked their way amongst their ranks. If the
whole line had made a general charge against the phalanx while still unbroken,
as the Paeligni did at the beginning of the action against the "caetrati,"
they would have spitted themselves upon their spears and have been powerless
against their massed attack.
44.42
The infantry were being slaughtered all over the field; only those who
threw away their arms were able to make good their escape. The cavalry,
on the other hand, quitted the field with hardly any loss, the king himself
being the first to flee. He was already on his way to Pella with his "sacred"
cavalry, and Cotys and the Odrysaeans were following at his heels. The
rest of the Macedonian horse also got away with their ranks unbroken, because
the infantry were between them and the enemy, and the latter were so fully
occupied in massacring the infantry that they forgot to pursue the cavalry.
For a long time the slaughter of the phalanx went on in front, flank and
rear. At last those who had escaped out of the hands of the enemy threw
away their arms and fled to the shore; some even went into the water and,
stretching out their hands in supplication to the men in the fleet, implored
them to save their lives. When they saw boats from all the ships rowing
to the place where they were they thought that they were coming to take
them up as prisoners rather than slay them, and they waded further into
the water, some even swimming. But when they found that they were being
killed by the men in the boats, those who could swim back to land met with
a more wretched fate, for the elephants, forced by their drivers to the
water's edge, trampled on them and crushed them to death as they came out.
It is universally admitted that never had so many Macedonians been killed
by the Romans in a single battle. As many as 20,000 men perished; 6000
who had fled to Pydna fell into the enemy's hands, and 5000 were made prisoners
in their flight. Of the victors not more than 100 fell, and of these the
majority were Paelignians; the wounded were much more numerous. If the
battle had begun earlier and there had been sufficient daylight for the
victors to continue the pursuit, the whole force would have been wiped
out. As it was, the approach of night shielded the fugitives and made the
Romans chary of following them over unknown country.
44.43
Perseus fled to the Pierian forest, accompanied by his suite and a numerous
body of cavalry. When he had entered the forest at a point where several
roads diverged, as night was approaching he struck into a side-path with
a very small body of those most faithful to him. The cavalry, left without
a leader, dispersed to their various cities; and a few reached Pella in
advance of Perseus himself, having gone by a straight road. Up to midnight
the king had considerable trouble and anxiety in trying to find his way.
Eulacus and Euctus and the royal pages were ready to meet the king in the
gloomy palace, but of all his friends who had lived through the battle
and regained Pella, not one came to him in spite of his repeated invitations.
There were only three who shared his flight, Euander of Crete, Neo a Boeotian,
and Archidamus the Aetolian. Fearing that those who refused to go to him
might soon venture upon a more serious step, he fled away at the fourth
watch, followed by certainly not more than 500 Cretans. He was intending
to go to Amphipolis, but he had left Pella in the night, anxious to cross
the Axius before daylight, as he thought the difficulty of crossing that
river might stop the Roman pursuit.
44.44
On his return to camp the consul's joy in his victory was damped by his
anxiety about his younger son. This was P. Scipio, who had been adopted
as grandson by Scipio Africanus, and himself received the title of Africanus,
from the destruction of Carthage in after years. He was only seventeen
at the time-a further cause for anxiety-and while he was in full pursuit
of the enemy, he was carried away by the press into another part of the
field. On his return late in the day to the camp, his father, finding him
safe and sound, could at last feel unmixed joy in his great victory. The
news of the battle had already been carried to Amphipolis, and the matrons
flocked to the temple of Diana-the Tauropolon-to invoke her aid. Diodorus,
the governor of the city, was apprehensive lest the Thracian garrison,
some 2000 strong, should in the tumult and confusion plunder the city.
He therefore hired a man to impersonate a letter-carrier, and received
a pretended despatch from him in the middle of the forum. It stated that
the Roman fleet had put in at Emathia, and the fields all round were being
ravaged. The officers in charge of Emathia implored him to send the garrison
to deal with the ravagers. After reading the despatch he urged the Thracians
to go and defend the coast of Emathia; they would inflict great slaughter
on the Romans while scattered through the fields, and would also secure
large booty. At the same time he made light of the report of an unfavourable
battle; if, he said, it were true, fugitive after fugitive would have come
in fresh from the fight. In this way he got rid of the Thracians, and as
soon as he saw that they had crossed the Strymon, he shut the gates.
44.45
Three days after the battle Perseus arrived at Amphipolis, and from that
city he sent heralds with a caduceus to Paulus. In the meanwhile Hippias,
Midon, and Pantauchus, the principal men among the king's friends who had
fled from the field of battle to Beroea, went and made their surrender
to the Roman consul. In the case of others also, their fears prompted them,
one after another, to do the same. The consul sent his son Q. Fabius, together
with L. Lentulus and Q. Metellus, with despatches to Rome announcing his
victory. He gave the spoils taken from the enemy's army lying on the field
of battle to the foot soldiers and the plunder from the surrounding country
to the cavalry on condition that they were not absent from the camp more
than two nights. The camp at Pydna was shifted to a site nearer the sea.
First of all Beroea, then Thessalonica and Pella, and almost the whole
of Macedonia, city by city, surrendered within two days. The people of
Pydna, who were the nearest to the consul, had not yet sent envoys, for
their citizens were prevented from coming to any decision in their council
by the mixed population drawn from many nationalities and also by the crowd
of fugitives from the battle. The gates were not only closed but walled
up. Midon and Pantauchus were sent up to the walls to hold a parley with
Solon, the commandant of the garrison; by his means the mob of fighting
men was sent way. The surrendered town was given up to the soldiers to
plunder. Perseus' one hope was in the help of the Bisaltians, but finding
this hope vain he came before the assembled citizens of Amphipolis, with
his son Philip, with the intention of kindling the courage of the Amphipolitans
themselves and of the men, both infantry and cavalry, who had accompanied
him or been carried there in their flight. But as often as he tried to
speak he was prevented by his tears, and finding that he could not utter
a word, he told Euander what he wanted to bring before the people and went
down from the tribunal. The sight of the king and his distressful weeping
moved the people themselves to groans and tears, but they would not listen
to Euander. Some in the middle of the Assembly had the audacity to shout
out, "Go away, both of you, lest we, the few survivors, perish on your
account." Their daring opposition closed Euander's lips. Then the king
retired to his house, and after placing an amount of gold and silver on
board some boats lying in the Strymon, went down to the river. The Thracians
would not venture on board and dispersed to their homes, so did the rest
of the soldiers; the Cretans, attracted by the money, followed him. As
the distribution of it amongst them would cause more jealousy than gratitude,
50 talents were placed on the bank to be scrambled for. Whilst they were
going on board, after the scrambling, in wild confusion, they sunk a boat
in the mouth of the river through overcrowding. That day they arrived at
Galepsus and the day after they reached Samothrace, for which they were
making. It is asserted that 2000 talents were conveyed there.
44.46
Paulus placed Roman officers in charge of the cities which had surrendered,
so that the vanquished party might not be ill-treated now that peace was
established. He kept the heralds from Perseus with him, and as he was unaware
of the king's flight he sent P. Nasica with a small detachment of horse
and foot to Amphipolis for the purpose of ravaging Sintice and frustrating
any attempt which the king might make. At the same time Meliboea was taken
and sacked by Cn. Octavius. Cn. Anicius was sent to Aegeum, but as the
citizens did not know that the war was over they made a sortie from the
town and the Romans lost 200 men. The following day the consul left Pydna
with the whole of his army and formed his camp two miles distant from Pella.
He remained there several days, surveying the city from every side, and
he observed that it was not without good reason that it had been chosen
as the royal residence. It is situated on the south-west slope of a hill
and surrounded by a marsh too deep to be crossed on foot either in summer
or winter. The citadel the "Phacus," which is close to the city, stands
in the marsh itself, projecting like an island, and is built on a huge
substructure which is strong enough to carry a wall and prevent any damage
from the infiltration from the water of the lagoon. At a distance it appears
to be continuous with the city wall, but it is really separated by a channel
which flows between the two walls and is connected with the city by a bridge.
Thus it cuts off all means of access from an external foe, and if the king
shut anyone up there, there could be no possibility of escape except by
the bridge, which could be very easily guarded. The royal treasure was
kept there, but nothing was found there at that time beyond the 300 talents
which had been sent to Gentius and then kept back. During the time the
camp was at Pella numerous embassies of congratulation were received, mostly
from Thessaly. On receiving intelligence that Perseus had sailed to Samothrace
the consul left Pella, and after a few days' march arrived at Amphipolis.
The fact of the whole population coming out to meet him was a sufficient
proof that they were not mourning the loss of a good and just king.
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